University Makes New Black from Tiny Carbon TubesRice University has developed the world's darkest material, made from millions of tiny vertical tubes of carbon. Pulickel Ajayan, who helped lead the project, says the material isn't perfect, but it's "pretty dark." It approaches the elusive ideal black, which would absorb all colors of light and reflect none.

Rice University has developed the world's darkest material, made from millions of tiny vertical tubes of carbon. The material resembles a bed of grass.

While it is not perfect, engineering professor Pulickel Ajayan, who helped lead the project, says it's "pretty dark." His substance approaches the elusive ideal black, which would absorb all colors of light and reflect none, and it's close to three times darker than the previous record-holder, nickel-phosphorous alloy.

The research will be published in a forthcoming issue of the journal Nano Letters.